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Phone: 305-666-9322
Miami Beach Real Estate
agent Mayi de la Vega
The
first South Floridians were the Tequesta Indians, who discovered the
area more than 10,000 years ago and had it all to themselves until the
Spanish claimed it in the 16th Century. In 1821, the Spanish flag was
lowered and the Stars and Stripes raised over Florida. Enterprising
wreckers from the Bahamas came to South Florida and the Keys in the
early 19th Century, to hunt for the remains of an international array
of ill-fated ships that crashed onto the treacherous Great Florida
reef.
At about the same time, the Seminoles
arrived, along with a group of runaway slaves. They fought to stay in
Florida, and the area became a war zone from 1836 until 1857,
with most non-Indian residents being soldiers
stationed at Fort Dallas on the Miami River. Some of these soldiers
and a few other adventurous frontier settlers gave Miami yet another
new, foreign-born population. At war's end, many of the Indians
remained in the Everglades.
The Bahamians who
stayed became Miami's first permanent residents and helped found South
Florida's first real community, Coconut Grove.
The area's greatest change came thanks to a
visionary Cleveland widow named Julia Tuttle, who purchased 640 acres
on the north bank of the Miami River in 1891, moving her family into
the abandoned Fort Dallas buildings. Within four years, Tuttle -- the
"mother of Miami" -- convinced Standard Oil co-founder Henry Flagler
to extend his railroad to Miami, build a luxury hotel, and lay out a
new town. The railroad arrived in 1896. The City of Miami was
incorporated on July 28 that same year.
All kinds of people flocked to the new city,
which was never an ordinary Southern town. Miami's first mayor was an
Irish Catholic. Most of the early merchants were Jewish. African
Americans and Black Bahamians made up
one-third of the city's incorporators.
Greater
Miami never lacked for forward thinkers, including John Collins (a New
Jersey Quaker) and Prest-O-Lite king Carl Fisher, who together in 1913
embarked on an agriculture venture on a spit of oceanfront beach and
started a bridge across the bay. Miami Beach
was born.
During the Depression, Pan American Airways
launched the era of modern aviation with "Flying Clippers" from
Miami's Dinner Key. Even then, Pan Am advertised Miami as the "Gateway
to the Americas." Today, Greater Miami has overtaken New York's JFK as
the nation's leading gateway for international arrivals with 15.1
million international travelers arriving in the U.S. through Miami in
2002.
Also during the
Depression, another new group, predominantly Jewish, came to Miami
Beach and built a large number of small hotels with stark moderne
lines along lower Collins Avenue and Ocean Drive. This building boom
helped bring the area out of the
Depression and forty years later would become the world-famous Art
Deco District, which includes the internationally renowned South Beach
area.
World War II brought another 100,000 people
to Greater Miami and the Beaches when the Army Air Corps and the navy
established major training centers. Many of these servicemen made the
area their permanent home after the war. By the end of the 1950s,
South Florida had doubled its pre-war population.
When Fidel Castro took over Cuba in 1959, no
one dreamed that the revolution would change Miami as much as Cuba.
The Cuban exiles who were just beginning to pour into the area were
bringing the next Miami with them. The '60s and '80s brought
mind-boggling change as more than half-a-million Cuban exiles fled to
Miami to start a new life. These enterprising refugees launched the
area into its future as what many call the "Capital of the Americas."

The 1980s and early '90s brought a multi-billion
dollar infusion of investment capital that produced a beautiful new
Miami downtown skyline, a reborn Miami Beach, a modernized
transportation infrastructure and a new way of life that features the
arts, culture, sports and entertainment, all with an international
accent. Although it has changed almost beyond recognition (again),
Miami Beach has thrived amidst change and overcome many difficulties.
Greater Miami and the City of Miami Beach
continue to be an international mecca for travel, business and to
establish a home.
Call Mayi de la Vega @ 305-666-9322
Mayi de la Vega licensed Real Estate agent
serving the cities of
Coral Gables,
Coconut Grove,
Cocoplum,
Gables Estates,
Gables by the Sea,
Aventura,
Key Biscayne, Miami, Miami Beach,
North Miami,
South Miami,
Pinecrest,
Miami-Dade County Florida Luxury Estate Homes Realty
Phone:
305-666-9322 Fax: 305-663-9815
mayi@mayidelavega.com
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